Weekly Links and Comments

Mad Libs Increase Form Conversions with 25-40%

This week saw a lot of discussion on “Mad Libs” on how conversion for forms could increase dramatically by using forms with inline elements and a narrative format. LukeW writes about a test where vast.com saw an increase in form conversions with 25-40%

Ron and his team ran some A/B testing online that compared a traditional Web form layout with a narrative “Mad Libs” format. In Vast.com’s testing, Mad Libs style forms increased conversion across the board by 25-40%.

Read the full article on LukeW’s blog.

Mad Libs Do Not Increase Form Conversions

A guy named Patrick McKenzie tried  the Mad Libs technique on a form and came to the conclusion that in his case with his users, the result was the opposite. I think that he has a point in that you must test on your users and not just listenting to “facts” from others. But to be honest he could have set his test up better. The best thing with this post is the comments.

Read the full article at Patrick McKenzie’s blog

Buzrr

A colleague of mine, Dennis Hettema has released a Google Buzz Aggregator/Counter named buzrr that makes it easier to find trending and popular topics posted on Google Buzz. There are some tools as well for integration into you website. Interesting to see where this is heading. Good Job Dennis!

How to get better at UI Design

I found this good article at http://ui-patterns.com on how to get better at UI design. It categorizes parts of the job needed to build and design better UI’s.

Make sure you follow me on Twitter

I post links each and every day with focus on User Experience and Web Development on my two twitter accounts, make sure you follow me there: @uxs and @hising. UXS is more focused on design, user experience and usability while hising is more on web development in general and somewhat more personal. See you on Twitter!

Weekly Best of – Selected Links

Auto Resize jQuery Plugin

I really like Facebooks implementation of automatic expanding textareas. This auto resize plugin for jQuery helps you add that neat usable effect to your forms.

Typography on the web

Smashing Magazine has a really good list of resources for web typography.

API for Location based on IP

I think we have only seen the beginning of location-based web-apps. This little GeoIP-API helps you geographically locate your visitors.

Screen Scraping with CSS Selectors

This Simple HTML DOM Parser written in PHP makes it easy for you to screen scrape content. For all jQuery and CSS selector fanatics out there, it will be great news for you that it supports CSS Selectors and it supports invalid HTML (if it wouldnt it would be pretty useless).

How to create a leaner User Interface

There is a good list on Webdesigner Depot about different techniques you could use in order to de-clutter your user interface.

Library Independent JavaScript

I found this article by James Padolsey interesting, because I think it is a growing problem. People tend to write jQuery, Prototype now a days, not JavaScript, this is ok for me, but when you are building something that other people will maintain and develop it may be interesting to try to find a development model that are framework agnostic. James has some examples in this article how to create an absctraction on top of your favorite javascript library.

Free Database for IP to Country

Maxmind has free databases for retrieving country and city from the users IP-address. I am using this on a number of websites and believe it is a very good tool for creating more usable web sites and easier to target (and split) advertising.

One Trillion Dollars

One trillion dollars is a lot of money. This article shows you how much it is in real life in volume. Amazing.

Do you have more links I should share or look at? Follow me on Twitter and share your favorite links.

Some Web Development Links for You

Not a big update. 

John Resig is writing a new selector engine, sizzle, interesting

I wonder when John have the time to write code, write books, write documentation, write for his blog AND work for Mozilla. He is one productive client side coding entrepreneur. Sizzle is Work In Progress, but John claims it is 4 times faster than the jQuery Selector Engine.

YUI has a new Interaction Pattern in their library

I do not know how many times I have been part of discussions about how to implement a sign in procedure the best way. This new pattern from YUI tries to describe the characteristics of the problem. I really like Yahoo’s initiative with YUI trying to help designers and likes from revinventing the wheel time after time.

Parallax scrolling made easy with JavaScript

10 years ago something, we believed DHTML and JavaScript where the solution to everything, and there are solutions I am proud of from that time, and solutions I wouldnt mention even under torture. These days all client side stuff is focused on availability, usability and other non-relevant bilities ;-) . Where is all the cool stuff? jParallax is cool, and from a first point of view, somewhat useless, but hey, keep em coming.

Blueprint CSS 

I hate CSS. No I like separation of content, design and behaviour. But lets be honest, CSS is repetetive and often you find yourself chasing browser bugs hitting CTRL+S, ALT-TAB, CTRL-R, ALT-TAB …. That is why I believe we must minimize the rows of CSS we are actually writing, just as we try to do that with JavaScript using libraries such as jQuery, Prototype or Mootools. Blueprint CSS is interesting, I am thinking of implementing it into my mindset as the default CSS-library together with jQuery for JavaScript and Smarty for templating.

YAML (Yet Another Multicolumn Layout)

This one looks interesting as well, but the only reason I list this is because the name is the same as the configuration language YAML I will talk about below. 

YAML (YAML Ain’t Markup Language)

Before I have used XML for configuration, moving more and more over to JSON, because of the benefits parsing and using it. But YAML is what I have started using for some types of configuration, because of its easiness to read, write and share. Look into it. I love it for configuring navigations.

 

11 Ways to Increase Your Website Traffic


Create Good Content

The best way to increase traffic to your website, is to offer good content or service. If people like what you are offering, they will come back to you and they will link to you. There is no single technique better than this one for generating traffic to your website. How many links do you think wikipedia, Facebook, Twitter or Firefox has? What they have all in common are great content, in different forms.

Search Engine Optimization

If the Search Engines cant find you, you dont exist. If you cant compete with wikipedia, facebook, twitter or firefox for good content, you have to use all the white-hat SEO-techniques you can find in order to optimize your website for search engines. This can be done both on-site and off-site.

Link Exchange

Contact people who run websites or blogs similiar to yours and offer them a link to their site in exchange for a link back to you. This is a good way to start building links organically to your website. When your website is getting more and more popular, more people will contact you with similar offers. Only link to sites that actually has something to do with what you are offering. In order to maximise the search engine optimization, make sure the links you get corresponds to the keywords you are targeting.

Affiliate programs

If you are selling something online. Start an affiliate program and track referrals and give some of your profit to the one who referred the customer to you. If your offer is ok, people will start talking about your affiliate program and start generating traffic to your site, hoping to convert a user and earn a dollar or two. I think more and more people will start using this as a way to drive traffic to their sites. As it is today affiliate programs are mostly used by big players.

Pay Per Click Search Advertising

There are a couple of big solutions today for PPC (Pay-Per-Click) Advertising. The biggest name in the industry is of course Google Adwords. Yahoo and Microsoft also offers solutions for PPC-advertising. With PPC you either target a number of keywords and buy advertising space next to search result, or you buy advertising space on other sites that fits your targeted keywords and website content.

Banner Advertising

A lot of big blogs offers advertising possibilities for banners. Today the most commonly used format for banners on blogs are the square ones you often see above the fold on the right on blogs such as Problogger.net and alikes. The CPM for these type of banners differ a lot but I am sure you can find a good deal for such banner advertising if you look around the blogosphere. You can also post on webmaster forums such as forums.digitalpoint.com where you will find a big and alive community.

Social Networks

Use your contacts to drive traffic to your website. Use both your offline contacts and your online contacts. Typical examples on driving traffic to your site could be the following:

- Mail all your contacts (if they are part of the intended audience) about your website
- Create a Facebook Group that focus on your new website
- Sign up for MyBlogLog.com and promote your website as a commmunity
- Promote your website on MySpace
- Create a short (fun) movie and post it to YouTube.com
- Change your signature on all forums you are active on to include your new website
- Print a t-shirt with your websites url on and wear it to work and when shopping

Competitions and give-aways

Create a simple competition where you hand out a prize or two. The typical prize could be an ipod and a lifetime VIP-membership on your website. If you really want to build traffic, create a competition that acts as a link bait, making the contestants create natural links in forums and such. This is one of the most effective way to get links and traffic. But you have to have somewhere to announce the competition. I would suggest using competitions when you have started to gain an audience.

Link Baits

Link baits are powerful, but sometimes difficult to come up with. It is important to understand the concept. Link baits are content that gets people to link in numbers. A typical example could be someone naming their child Google, a woman throwing up on live TV, a funny letter, a mugshot or just something stupid. You get the picture? Link baits are important but also a question of timing and luck. Typical content that can be considered link baits is:

- Top 10 lists
- Articles with authority that helps people on a matter where there are a lot of interest
- A funny picture, story or movie
- Unique Content such as screenshots from new software or screencaps from upcoming movies
- Something cool or astounding

Link Building

Link building incorporates a lot of different techniques and approaches. This is long-time job and something that builds traffic long-term. But done right it is going to make a huge difference for your traffic. Link building can contain these approaches:

- Article submissions
- Directory submissions
- Social Network submissions
- Commenting on blogs
- Add link to footer in forums you are active in

Buy Traffic

There are a lot of different solutions available out there for buying traffic, from targeted traffic from adwords to people redirecting to your site from domains no longer in use. As you can see the quality of the traffic may differ a lot and you have to take this into account when thinking of buying traffic. But watch out, dont let good offers fool you, a lot of scams exists out there, if someone is selling 10000 unique visitors for $10 it is probably too good to be true.

In order to maximise the profits from the increased traffic, it is important that you know your front end architecture. Front-end architecture covers a vast range of topics within web development, seo and other areas.